D.A.T. Miner’s scientific contributions

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Creating Aztlán: Chicano art, indigenous sovereignty, and lowriding across Turtle Island
  • Article

January 2014

·

220 Reads

·

15 Citations

D.A.T. Miner

In lowriding culture, the ride is many things—both physical and intellectual. Embraced by both Xicano and other Indigenous youth, lowriding takes something very ordinary—a car or bike—and transforms it and claims it. Using the idea that lowriding is an Indigenous way of being in the world, artist and historian Dylan A. T. Miner discusses the multiple roles that Aztlán has played at various moments in time, from the pre-Cuauhtemoc codices through both Spanish and American colonial regimes, past the Chicano Movement and into the present day. Across this “migration story,” Miner challenges notions of mestizaje and asserts Aztlán, as visualized by Xicano artists, as a form of Indigenous sovereignty. Throughout this book, Miner employs Indigenous and Native American methodologies to show that Chicano art needs to be understood in the context of Indigenous history, anticolonial struggle, and Native American studies. Miner pays particular attention to art outside the U.S. Southwest and includes discussions of work by Nora Chapa Mendoza, Gilbert “Magú” Luján, Santa Barraza, Malaquías Montoya, Carlos Cortéz Koyokuikatl, Favianna Rodríguez, and Dignidad Rebelde, which includes Melanie Cervantes and Jesús Barraza. With sixteen pages of color images, this book will be crucial to those interested in art history, anthropology, philosophy, and Chicano and Native American studies. Creating Aztlán interrogates the historic and important role that Aztlán plays in Chicano and Indigenous art and culture.

Citations (1)


... Visual storytelling through the artwork of Gina Aparicio, and other sites of wisdom that consciously work with plant medicine and ancestors, reflect an active decolonial pathway to rooted Indigenous futures (Pérez 2003(Pérez , 2007Miner 2014). Xicana/x Indígena historical consciousness is bound up in the four directions, traditional medicine, interconnectivity, and intergenerational wisdom, or what Patrisia Gonzales calls "Mexican Traditional Medicine" (MTM). ...

Reference:

Xicana/x Indígena Futures: Re-rooting through Traditional Medicines
Creating Aztlán: Chicano art, indigenous sovereignty, and lowriding across Turtle Island
  • Citing Article
  • January 2014